Covid-positive strangers forced to share rooms
15 min ago Covid positive strangers forced to share rooms in Singapore quarantine From CNN’s Teele Rebane A rise in Covid-19 cases in Singapore is forcing strangers to share isolation rooms during the 10-day mandatory isolation period after testing positive. According to the Singaporean Ministry of Health, patients over the age of 15 can be placed in isolation alongside a Covid-positive person of the same gender, even if they do not know one another. The Ministry of Health said private rooms were available on request and where possible. A spokesperson said the measure was necessary to “optimize capacity,” as Singapore records increasing Covid-19 numbers, with 209 new infections reported Sunday. Positive cases are placed in one of three tiers of accommodation based on the severity of their symptoms, according to the Ministry of Health. Room-sharing is implemented across community care centers, Covid treatment centers and hospitals, which make up the three tiers. Covid-19 patients are also able to quarantine at home where possible. But while positive cases may have to share rooms, Singapore will no longer mandate that close contacts isolate. Instead, they will be issued with a week-long health risk warning and tested daily. 1 hr 4 min ago Nearly 1,400 people receive incorrect Covid test results as cases mount in Australia From CNN's Angus Watson A Covid-19 testing facility in Sydney, Australia admitted on Monday it has issued incorrect PCR Covid test results to 1,395 people since December 22. SydPath, operated by St Vincent’s Hospital, said it sent negative results by SMS to 995 people tested on December 23 and 24 despite their PCR tests not having been processed. The blunder was detected by the hospital during an investigation into how a further 400 people swabbed on December 22 and 23 received a negative result despite being positive for Covid-19. “We have identified what occurred and can confirm it was related to a specific human error. SydPath have put procedures in place to ensure this cannot happen again,” SydPath wrote in a statement. “We are sincerely sorry for this error and acknowledge the significant impact it has had on those involved.” The mistakes come as Australia reported more than 9,000 new Covid-19 cases on Monday and an “unprecedented Covid-testing activity,” according to SydPath. New South Wales, home to Sydney, recorded 6,324 cases from 97,241 tests in the 24 hours to Monday morning. NSW also reported the country's first death from Omicron -- a double-vaccinated patient with underlying health conditions. 1 hr 7 min ago Nearly 1,500 flights canceled in US Sunday due to Omicron surge From CNN’s Andy Rose Nearly 1,500 flights in the US were canceled on Sunday, marking the third day in a row of mass cancellations over the Christmas weekend. The disruption is caused by staff and crew being out sick due to the continued surge of the Omicron variant. As of 11:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, airlines had canceled 1,448 flights within, into or out of the country. Another 6,169 flights were delayed, according to the tracking website FlightAware . However, those staffing problems appear to be slowly getting better. As of late Sunday night, 384 US flights had been canceled, FlightAware said. 1 hr 50 min ago Chinese officials are disinfecting an entire city as Covid cases rise From CNN’s Beijing bureau Local authori
Covid positive strangers forced to share rooms in Singapore quarantine
From CNN’s Teele Rebane
A rise in Covid-19 cases in Singapore is forcing strangers to share isolation rooms during the 10-day mandatory isolation period after testing positive.
According to the Singaporean Ministry of Health, patients over the age of 15 can be placed in isolation alongside a Covid-positive person of the same gender, even if they do not know one another.
The Ministry of Health said private rooms were available on request and where possible.
A spokesperson said the measure was necessary to “optimize capacity,” as Singapore records increasing Covid-19 numbers, with 209 new infections reported Sunday.
Positive cases are placed in one of three tiers of accommodation based on the severity of their symptoms, according to the Ministry of Health.
Room-sharing is implemented across community care centers, Covid treatment centers and hospitals, which make up the three tiers. Covid-19 patients are also able to quarantine at home where possible.
But while positive cases may have to share rooms, Singapore will no longer mandate that close contacts isolate. Instead, they will be issued with a week-long health risk warning and tested daily.
Nearly 1,400 people receive incorrect Covid test results as cases mount in Australia
From CNN's Angus Watson
A Covid-19 testing facility in Sydney, Australia admitted on Monday it has issued incorrect PCR Covid test results to 1,395 people since December 22.
SydPath, operated by St Vincent’s Hospital, said it sent negative results by SMS to 995 people tested on December 23 and 24 despite their PCR tests not having been processed.
The blunder was detected by the hospital during an investigation into how a further 400 people swabbed on December 22 and 23 received a negative result despite being positive for Covid-19.
“We have identified what occurred and can confirm it was related to a specific human error. SydPath have put procedures in place to ensure this cannot happen again,” SydPath wrote in a statement.
“We are sincerely sorry for this error and acknowledge the significant impact it has had on those involved.”
The mistakes come as Australia reported more than 9,000 new Covid-19 cases on Monday and an “unprecedented Covid-testing activity,” according to SydPath.
New South Wales, home to Sydney, recorded 6,324 cases from 97,241 tests in the 24 hours to Monday morning.
NSW also reported the country's first death from Omicron -- a double-vaccinated patient with underlying health conditions.
Nearly 1,500 flights canceled in US Sunday due to Omicron surge
From CNN’s Andy Rose
Nearly 1,500 flights in the US were canceled on Sunday, marking the third day in a row of mass cancellations over the Christmas weekend.
The disruption is caused by staff and crew being out sick due to the continued surge of the Omicron variant.
As of 11:30 p.m. ET on Sunday, airlines had canceled 1,448 flights within, into or out of the country. Another 6,169 flights were delayed, according to the tracking website FlightAware .
However, those staffing problems appear to be slowly getting better. As of late Sunday night, 384 US flights had been canceled, FlightAware said.
Chinese officials are disinfecting an entire city as Covid cases rise
From CNN’s Beijing bureau
Local authorities in the Chinese city of Xi'an are disinfecting the entire city of 13 million people as Covid-19 cases continue to rise.
The task of disinfecting Xi'an began on Sunday. Residents were told by the local council to close their windows and doors and not touch outdoor surfaces and plants.
The order came despite current guidelines from China’s CDC and State Council preventing “excessive disinfection,” including “mass disinfection of the outdoor environment.”
Xi'an, the capital of northwestern Shaanxi Province, recorded 150 of China’s 162 locally transmitted symptomatic Covid-19 cases on Sunday, according to the National Health Commission.
China's Covid epicenter: The outbreak in Xi'an, now at 637 cases since December 9, is one of the largest city outbreaks since Wuhan became the epicenter of the global pandemic in 2019.
Growing frustration: Residents criticized the disinfection measures online as the program added to already increasing restrictions in the city. Citizens accused the local government of mishandling and oversimplifying its response to the outbreak, according to state-run newspaper Global Times.
Global Times also reported a foreign teacher was fired at an international school after calling health workers “insane” and spitting on the ground on Friday.
Lockdown measures: Xi'an woke to a fourth mass testing campaign on Monday. Local officials told residents there was “no need to panic” at increasing Covid-19 infections -- an upward trend that may continue through the coming days.
Xi'an has been under strict lockdown since December 23, despite 95.5% of the population being vaccinated. Public venues and transportation routes have been closed, with only essential public services and businesses remaining open.
The pandemic pushed nearly 100 million people into poverty. They're struggling to escape
From CNN's Michelle Toh
Dipali Roy couldn't afford to eat.
She and her husband, Pradip Roy, were garment workers in Bangladesh when the Covid-19 pandemic hit last spring, leading to mass layoffs at their factory.
Like millions of people around the world, both lost their jobs in the capital city of Dhaka, where they had worked for years making pants, shirts and jackets. And like countless other migrants , they were forced to move home to the countryside to cut down on expenses.
The World Bank estimates that 97 million people across the globe fell into poverty due to the pandemic in 2020, living on less than $2 a day.
There has been little improvement since.
"Globally, the increase in poverty that occurred in 2020 due to Covid still lingers, and the Covid-induced poor in 2021 continues to be 97 million people," economists at the World Bank said in a blog post earlier this year. They noted, however, that overall poverty should go down this year.
"We barely had enough to return home," Dipali Roy said in an interview in Bengali from the family's home, a corrugated metal shack in a village in northern Bangladesh.
As the couple looked for new ways to earn a living, they struggled to adjust. They tried to find a loan to start a small business, but at first no one was able or willing to help. Some local nonprofit
Hoping to land a job in agriculture, Pradip Roy approached some farmers. But he was dismissed as a "Dhaka man," who wouldn't be able to cope in harsh weather conditions, recounted his wife.
Above all, "food was the biggest problem," said
2020 led to a historic setback in the fight against global poverty, with the number of the world's poorest rising for the first time in over 20 years, according to the World Bank.
Read more:
Flying home after the holidays? Getting vaccinated or boosted is the first step toward safe travel, expert says
From CNN's Aya Elamroussi
For Americans traveling after Christmas and New Year's, getting their Covid-19 vaccinations or booster doses as soon as possible is critical to safely avoid serious illness, one health expert told CNN on Saturday.
Amid a surge of cases nationwide fueled by the Omicron coronavirus variant before the holiday season, parts of the country are reporting increased hospitalizations and deaths. And people need to be prepared for a heightened risk of infection during travel by taking preventative measures, according to Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the school of tropical medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.
"If you've only gotten two doses of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, even though that officially counts as fully vaccinated, we know that its impact on breakthrough symptomatic illness is close to zero," Hotez told CNN's Amara Walker.
The initial two-dose regiment will still protect "better for serious illness," he said, "but you still need to get boosted, I think, if you want to travel safely."
Booster shots may take two weeks to provide peak immunity , doctors have said, meaning the sooner one gets vaccinated, the better. Other steps, including wearing a quality mask , can help lower risk of infection.
Millions of Americans who are immunocompromised should delay future travel plans for a few weeks if possible in the hope that the current surge won't span as long as previous ones, Hotez said.
Read more: